> > What do I check next? > > Thank you. > > Cheers, Gene Heskett
Since Olivier wrote that he only used xinetd once, I figured I’d best chime in. I use it all the time (not that I know very much about it). Here are parts of my CHECKLIST for a new node: yum install openssh-server yum install xinetd yum install dump (xfsdump is problematic) yum install mtx yum install mt-st yum remove xfsdump Add a file with the name .amandahosts to the <backup-user> home directory with these contents: backup-server.full.name <backup-user> amdump amindexd chmod 600 /home/<backup-user>/.*amandahosts #it insists on this My xinetd start file matches yours, as quoted in a recent email. service amanda { socket_type = stream protocol = tcp wait = no user = <backup-user> group = root #whatever you are using server = /usr/local/libexec/amanda/amandad #wherever your file actually IS server_args = -auth=bsdtcp amdump amindexd amidxtaped disable = no groups = yes } /sbin/service xinetd restart # restart xinetd If they don't already exist, add these in /etc/services amanda 10080/udp # Dump server control amidxtape 10083/tcp # Amanda tape indexing amandaidx 10082/tcp # Amanda recovery program ON SERVER: new node: add to disklist file add to /etc/sysconfig/iptables and restart with /sbin/service iptables restart # if you have iptables running add to .amandahosts Test a simple backup (without using up a tape). On SERVER: amdump <config> --no-taper <newclientnode> / # or any DLE that’s small ======================= Any of this help? Deb Baddorf Fermilab